This is a very nicely done hand RUBBED OIL FINISHED NO STAIN OR CLEAR JUST BLO OIL ONLY.
#MAUSER K98 REPLACEMENT STOCK FREE#
Just in time for this years deer season, Leave that mint original stock at home and shoot worry free all day AT RANGE OR TOURNAMENTS, REENACTORS or use it to hunt late fall woods. in its present condition I would say your rifle is worth less than what import marked rifles cost.Beautiful K98 Mauser Laminated MIL Surp Step Down Barrel Replacement Stock Set Beautiful K98 Mauser Laminated MIL Surp Step Down Barrel Replacement Stock Set Once a collectable firearm is sporterized it significantly reduces the firearms value unless the rifle can be brought back to its original condition. 17 model 172 pump action, modeled off the old winchesters, which apparently is a hard to find gun.
Considering I got this German K 98 + a Taurus. Also this Mauser doesn't have any import markings.įor trading for my 4 year old diamond archery bow I think I got a pretty good deal. all the numbers are matching except for the trigger guard.
who ever had cut down the stock did a pretty nice job of it and and filled in the hole where the original sling would have went. it has original sites on it and is in pretty decent condition. the sad part is that the stock has been cut down and sporterized. It has dou 44 written on the receiver along with German Nazi proof marks. So a little while back i got a German Mauser k98 and have been trying to figure out what its worth. S243G Mauser-Werke AG, Werk Borsigwalde, Berlin-Borsigwalde, EichborndammĢ7 Erfurter Maschinenfabrik (ERMA) came under same management as Feinmechanische Werke GmbHĤ2 Mauser-Werke AG, Oberndorf a./N, early codeĢ37 Berlin-Luebecker Maschinenfabriken, Werk LuebeckĢ43 Mauser-Werke AG, Werk Borsigwalde, Berlin-Borsigwalde, Eichborndammĩ45 Waffenwerke Bruenn AG, Brno, Czechoslovakia S243 Mauser-Werke AG, Werk Borsigwalde, Berlin-Borsigwalde, Eichborndamm S/237 Berlin-Luebecker Maschinenfabriken, Werk Luebeck S/42K Mauser-Werke AG, Oberndorf a./N, production in 1934 S/42G Mauser-Werke AG, Oberndorf a./N, production in 1935
#MAUSER K98 REPLACEMENT STOCK CODE#
S/42 Mauser-Werke AG, Oberndorf a./N, early code S/27G Erfurter Maschinenfabrik (ERMA) came under same management as Feinmechanische Werke GmbH S/27 Erfurter Maschinenfabrik (ERMA) came under same management as Feinmechanische Werke GmbH Swp Late code for Waffenwerke Bruenn AG, Brno, Czechoslovakia Svw Late code for Mauser-Werke AG, Oberndorf a./N 25īcd/ar Dual code denotes manufacture jointly by Gustloff Werke in Weimar, and Mauser-Werke AG, Berlinīnz Steyr-Daimler-Puch AG, Werk Steyr, Steyr, Austriaĭot Waffenwerke Bruenn AG, Brno, Czechoslovakiaĭuv Berlin-Luebecker Maschinenfabriken, Werk Luebeck Please report any errors to me.Īr Mauser-Werke AG, Werk Borsigwalde, Berlin-Borsigwalde, EichborndammĪx Feinmechanische Werke GmbH, Erfurt, Altonaerstr. These codes may apply to German pistols of the same era, but I have no information about that.Īs always, I'm not responsible for any inaccuracies in Olson's data, just for the transcription. They can be used to get some historical information about your particular rifle. The following table lists the ordnance codes found in Mauser Bolt Rifles by L. Other markings are usually either proof marks (indicating that the barrel was test fired with cartridges loaded with a larger charge of gunpowder than normally used to ensure safety) or Waffenamt (ordnance department) markings, indicated by the symbol of an eagle with outstreached wings with the letters WaAxxx below, where xxx is a 2- or 3-digit number indicating which Waffenamt accepted the piece. (Early codes were sometimes numerical or a combination of letters and numbers.) The code indicates the manufacturer of the receiver, and the number below the code is the year in which the part was made. The top of the receiver (that part of the barrel into which the bolt shoves the cartridge) usually has a 2- or 3-letter code with a number below it. German WW2-era military rifles usually have markings on the receiver, barrel, rear sight, and stock, from which one can get some information about the history of the piece. German WW2 Ordnance Codes for Military Rifles I couldn't lay my hands on my copy of Guns of the Third Reich, but found this with a quick search: